1. Methodological quality of systematic reviews on atopic dermatitis treatments: a cross-sectional study
- Author
-
Leonard Ho, Yolenda Man Kei Cheung, Cyrus Chung Ching Choi, Irene Xinyin Wu, Chen Mao, and Vincent Chi Ho Chung
- Subjects
Evidence-based practice ,meta-analysis ,dermatitis, atopic ,research design ,systematic reviews ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
AbstractBackground Systematic reviews (SRs) could offer the best evidence supporting interventions, but methodological flaws limit their trustworthiness in decision-making. This cross-sectional study appraised the methodological quality of SRs on atopic dermatitis (AD) treatments.Methods We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Database for SRs on AD treatments published in 2019–2022. We extracted SRs’ bibliographical data and appraised SRs’ methodological quality with AMSTAR (A MeaSurement Tool to Assess systematic Reviews) 2. We explored associations between methodological quality and bibliographical characteristics.Results Among the 52 appraised SRs, only one (1.9%) had high methodological quality, while 45 (86.5%) critically low. For critical domains, only five (9.6%) employed comprehensive search strategy, seven (13.5%) provided list of excluded studies, 17 (32.7%) considered risk of bias in primary studies, 21 (40.4%) contained registered protocol, and 24 (46.2%) investigated publication bias. Cochrane reviews, SR updates, SRs with European corresponding authors, and SRs funded by European institutions had better overall quality. Impact factor and author number positively associated with overall quality.Conclusions Methodological quality of SRs on AD treatments is unsatisfactory. Future reviewers should improve the above critical methodological aspects. Resources should be devolved into upscaling evidence synthesis infrastructure and improving critical appraisal skills of evidence users.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF